Disclosure: I'm a senior backend tech lead and I run HostingGuru, where Telegram alerts ship as a built-in feature. This tutorial works on any platform — it's the manual version of what HostingGuru does for you. Useful even if you never become a customer. There's a hierarchy of where production alerts go, ranked by how likely you are to actually see them. Email → 14% open rate within an hour, less
很多团队的网络监控并不算差。 链路可用率有、接口带宽有、CPU 和内存有、异常告警也接进了企业微信、飞书和短信。但真正出了事,复盘时还是会出现同一句话:当时知道出问题了,但没有把现场留住。 这就是为什么越来越多团队开始关注网络回溯分析系统。 它解决的不是“能不能看到告警”这个初级问题,而是更关键的两个问题: 告警发生时,能不能快速还原到底是哪一段流量、哪一条路径、哪一种会话出了问题 事故结束后,能不能基于证据复盘,而不是靠聊天记录和印象拼凑过程 对云上和混合云场景来说,这件事尤其重要。因为链路更长、设备更多、路径更动态,很多故障不是“持续坏”,而是短时抖动、瞬时拥塞、路径切换、策略误命中。如果没有回溯能力,排障就很容易沦为赛后猜谜。 这篇文章不讲空洞概念,直接从一线运维视角拆清楚:云上网络回溯分析系统到底该怎么建,应该覆盖哪些能力,落地时最容易踩哪些坑。 先说结论: 传统监控擅长发现“异常
If you manage a remote team of 10+ people, laptop battery monitoring is one of those quiet problems you only notice when it's too late: a dev's MacBook dies on a client call, a sales rep's Dell shuts down mid-demo, or you suddenly need to replace 8 laptops in the same quarter because nobody saw it coming. This guide walks through how to track laptop battery health across a remote team — the metric
The Problem You install OpenClaw, configure it, and let it run in the background. But how do you actually know it's working? There's no built-in status page. No heartbeat alerts. No way to see if it's processing tasks or just sitting idle. I built a simple, self-hostable monitoring dashboard for OpenClaw agents: 🔗 OpenClaw Monitor on GitHub Tech Stack: Frontend: Vue 3 (Composition API) + Elemen
The Problem Most engineers deploy to Kubernetes by clicking buttons in a UI. I built Archnet — a fully automated Internal Developer Platform What is an Internal Developer Platform? An IDP is the infrastructure layer that sits between your code How code gets deployed How secrets are managed How the system monitors itself How failures get detected and fixed Most companies pay Humanitec or Backsta
There's about $400 of meat, milk, and miscellaneous condiments in my kitchen fridge at any given time. It runs 24/7, makes a quiet humming noise, and gives no indication when something's wrong until you open the door three days later and recoil. The freezer compartment is worse: a slow failure can defrost everything before you notice the puddle. I already had a TP-Link P110 smart plug on the fridg
We had ArgoCD running perfectly. Every deployment was reconciled from Git. Drift detection worked. Rollbacks were one-click. Our GitOps setup was clean. Developers still couldn't provision a staging environment without pinging the platform team. That gap — between "GitOps in place" and "developers can actually self-serve" — is where most platform engineering teams get stuck. GitOps solves a real p